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MANUSCRIPT WRITING TIPS, TRICKS, & INFORMATION Madison Hedrick, MA Madison@usmedresearch.com
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THREE BROAD GROUPS Original scientific articles Reviews Case reports We will focus on original articles.
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THE ANATOMY OF A PAPER Presently, IMRAD is the format encouraged for the text of observational (i.e., retrospective/descriptive) and experimental (i.e., randomized controlled) studies. Introduction Methods Results Discussion Encouraged by the “Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts submitted to Biomedical Journals”
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CONSOLIDATED REPORTING OF TRIALS “Medical science depends entirely on the transparent reporting of clinical trials.” – Rennie, D (CONSORT, revised) The revised, published CONSORT 2010 is the most up-to-date version of the CONsolidated reporting of a randomized, clinical trial (RCT). The website includes a checklist of 25 items and a flow diagram authors can use for reporting a RCT.
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STRENGTHENING THE REPORTING OF OBSERVATIONAL STUDIES To improve the reporting of observational studies (cohort, case-controlled, or cross-sectional studies) a useful checklist of 22 items (the StrengThening the Reporting of Observational studies in Epidemiology [STROBE] statement) was created. The guidelines are available on the web for free and provides guidance to authors on how to improve the reporting of observational studies (this is widely supported by reviewers).
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PREPARING TO WRITE A MANUSCRIPT Literature review: The hypothesis formulated by the investigator is the common starting point to search the relevant publications for an answer. Peer reviewers are often experts. Not citing important articles poses the manuscript at risk for rejection. It is advisable to consult, at a minimum, two or three relevant, credible databases to find the crucial relevant articles and to track down the “landmark” articles. Also, make sure to find any recently published articles similar to the one you intend to submit.
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TARGET JOURNAL This might be an issue worth considering before writing your manuscript. Electronic and open-access journals are the latest resources for publishing and data dissemination. Consider an appropriate level of impact factor or journal quality The impact factor is the measure that reflects the average number of citations to recent articles published in science and social science journals. It is extremely important to read the instructions to authors section of the selected journal carefully.
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AUTHORSHIP Best to sort this out before writing a manuscript (as authorship can be a source of problems once the paper has been written). ICJME has guidelines that are most widely promoted by medical journals. According to these, co-authors should: 1) substantially contribute to the conception and design of the study, acquisition of data, and analysis and interpretation of data; 2) draft the article or revise it critically for important intellectual content; 3) approve the final version.
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AUTHORSHIP Based on the ICMJE guidelines, authors should be listed in decreasing order of their contribution and the senior author, or mentor, should be the last (but this convention has never been codified). Ensure accurate affiliations and contacts are provided, as they will be published on PubMed, as well as in the journal.
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ETHICAL ISSUES Highly recommended: Read the guidelines release by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) This is a forum for editors and publishers of peer-reviewed journals to discuss all aspects of publication ethics. COPE provides advice to editors and publishers on all aspects of publication ethics and how to handle cases of research and publication misconduct.
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MODELS FOR WRITING THE INITIAL DRAFT Useful algorithm published by O’Connor and Holmquist Start with making figures and tables, then proceed with summary statements (the conclusions summarizing the major contributions of the manuscript to the scientific community). Proceed with the identification of the audience, materials and methods, results, discussion, references, introduction, and conclusion.
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MODELS FOR WRITING THE INITIAL DRAFT A more general strategy is to increase productivity during the early phases of manuscript writing by ignoring the details that can be approached later (structure, grammar, and spelling). Like any story, a manuscript should have a beginning (introduction), middle (materials and methods), and an end (results). The discussion will serve as the “moral” of the story and put the study into perspective.
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A SYSTEMATIC METHOD FOR WRITING AND PUBLISHING PAPERS Adapted from Writing and Publishing in Medicine by Edward J Huth
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19 STEPS IN PLANNING, WRITING, AND PUBLISHING A PAPER (THE FIRST 8) 1. Decide on the message of the paper. What is the main point you hope to make? Can you state it in a single sentence? 2. Decide whether the paper is worth writing. Have similar findings been reported? Is there a need for this report? 3. Decide on the importance of your paper. Apply the “so what” test. (“How would the paper change the concept or practice?”)
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4. Decide the audience for the paper. Apply the “who cares” test (what type of people will care about your findings?). 5. Select the journal for which you will prepare the paper. 6. Search the literature or update your previous search for a firm decision on writing the paper and on its message. 7. Decide on authorship or review previous decisions on authorship. 8. Assemble the materials needed to write and publish the paper: protocols, data, graphs, illustrations, references, permissions. Decide on technical tools or help you need to publish the paper (biostatistics support, medical writing support, software, etc.).
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